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Friday, October 03, 2008

CAFB Calls Out The Leaders

An open letter from the Canadian Association of Food Banks:

Hunger an unacceptable and solvable problem

In the run-up to the October 14 federal election, there has been little mention of one of Canada’s most unacceptable problems – hunger. Though the economy is near the top of the list of issues Canadians care about, no party leader has addressed the fact that more than 720,000 Canadians are assisted by food banks every month, or that 2.7 million Canadians live in households where hunger is a daily and distressing reality.

A recent CBC/Environics survey found that 37% of Canadians are worried about being able to make ends meet. They have good reason to worry. Downturns in Canada’s manufacturing and forestry sectors have kept food banks busy, particularly in hard-hit areas like Windsor, Thunder Bay, northern Quebec and western Alberta. According to recently-released Statistics Canada data, 247,000 manufacturing jobs were lost between 2004 and 2007. In the past year alone, employment in the forestry sector has plummeted by 15%. We are hearing that many former manufacturing and forestry workers are making do with part-time, temporary or seasonal employment, and find themselves unable to access Employment Insurance when they can’t find work – and thus look to food banks to help put food on their tables.

Hunger is not limited to households in regions that have seen economic downturns. Though we hear about the thriving energy and resource development sectors in our western provinces, many in the west are being left behind. Economic growth has brought with it rising costs of housing, gas, heating oil and food. It is too often the case that those who have moved west to find prosperity quickly discover that their most pressing need is to find a food bank.

After several years of economic growth, it is now crystal clear that a rising tide does not lift all boats. On a daily basis, Canadians struggle with hunger. This problem has been plaguing our country for almost three decades. To properly address it, we need federal party leaders to provide visionary leadership, focused into a realistic and actionable national poverty reduction strategy. Though it touches many, hunger is too often a problem that goes unvoiced. Our leaders must face up to the problem and join the search for solutions.

For more information, please contact:

Shawn Pegg
Manager, Policy and Research
Canadian Association of Food Banks
(416) 203-9241, ext. 31

The Canadian Association of Food Banks (CAFB) is a national charitable organization representing the food bank community across Canada. Over 720,000 people access food banks each month - 39% are children. CAFB conducts research, engages in public education and advocates for public policy change to eliminate the causes of hunger in Canada. In 2007, the CAFB acquired and shared 8 million pounds of food industry donations through its National Food Sharing System for hungry Canadians.


If not an issue in this election, it will certainly be one during the next given the direction of the American economy (down, way down). If nobody is building houses or buying cars down South, auto and forestry workers up here pay the price.

2 comments:

  1. I have to use a food bank in the small town where I live as I'm on a fixed disability income. It's located in a Salvation Army Thrift store & we're allowed to access it once a month. It came into town a year ago.

    It started out well with the provision of food but has gone downhill really badly in the last 8 months.

    Now I get approx. 7 food items a month. Mostly
    canned goods - vegetables, 1 can fruit, if lucky a can of tuna fish, maybe a can of spaghetti sauce, 1soup, maybe a pkg of pasta & 1 sleeve of crackers. That's it.

    There used to be 1 loaf of bread, 1 box of cereal, juice, peanut butter & a couple of other items. And always pasta & spaghetti sauce.

    The reason it's become so bad is because people aren't donating like they once were. Higher food prices, gas, etc. means that folk don't have the "extra" to contribute anymore. And it's going to get a lot worse.

    I think many food banks will be shutting their doors & the main SA distributor in my area, Perth-Wellington, has already shut down 3 of their food bank outlets in the last 2 months. This does not bode well for those who live on a well-below the poverty line income. And the most direly affected ones will be families. It's frightening. After all, everyone needs to eat.

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  2. This is one reason why just 2 nights of debates, with only 5 of 17 party leaders, is not even close to enough. How much did the party leaders talk about agriculture - an issue central to carbon taxing, the economy of most provinces, and food security and safety? Not to mention it's a huge NAFTA issue too.

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